Come to the Salle Pleyel in Paris to see City Lights on a big screen with a live orchestra playing Chaplin’s music. Unforgettable - the day before Christmas Eve
Ever wondered what it would be like to live in the home of a film legend? Wonder no more. Charlie Chaplin’s Kennington home is for sale. He lived there with his mother between 1888 and 1889.
The exhibition includes original photographs, film posters, production notes, press cuttings, extracts from Chaplin’s films, contemporary newsreel footage, makings-of, rushes, and other archival material relating to the exhibition. In addition, we have access, via the family archives, to hitherto unpublished negatives, often 8x10, whose quality will allow for new, large format prints.
The recent cinema and DVD success of restored versions of “The Great Dictator” and “Modern Times” raises the issue of the contemporary relevance of the work of Charles Chaplin, who was born in London in 1889 and died in Switzerland in 1977, aged 88. True, the sheer staying-power of the Chaplin shorts as TV fare has ensured continuity between successive generations of viewers; and the Little Tramp image remains in constant use the world over, from America to Japan, as a symbol of the clash between man and machine, the confrontation with dictatorship and all the anachronistic grace of pantomime. This exhibition, however, seeks to go beyond the conventional portrait by drawing on the Chaplin family archives and their wealth of largely unknown documentation.
There exists a mass of subsidiary material relating to Chaplin’s films and life, and by tying this in with extracts on video we can actually show the artist at work. Where did the Little Tramp character come from? What kind of parts did he mostly play ? What comedy situations recur from film to film ? Beginning with the birth of the Little Tramp, the exhibition moves on to the elaboration of a gag via footage showing the enormous amount of work that could go into a sequence lasting only a few seconds. Comparisons with the Little Tramp’s successors “Jacques Tati’s Monsieur Hulot, for example” offer real insight into the Chaplin comic style and its legacy.
While the Little Tramp is without doubt the 20th century’s best-loved single character, it should not be forgotten that he was also an emblematic figure for the 1920s avant-garde. The press coverage of the time points up this dual success, as does the work of artists as different as Moholy-Nagy, Erwin Blumenfeld and Robert Doisneau. Born into the poverty of working-class London, Chaplin conquered America as it was becoming the most powerful nation in the world: how to explain this daydream come true? The exhibition closes with the end of the artistic growing-up period, the moment when the Little Tramp becomes an adult: confronted with Hitler, Chaplin set out to replace the dictator with a Jewish barber; but then looked his viewers right in the eye, as if to address the whole of human kind.
The Curators
Sam Stourdzé, exhibition curator, notably of Les Coulisses d’Hollywood (Behind the Scenes in Hollywood), photographs from the Universal Studios collection, Paris Photo, 2001.
Christian Delage, historian, whose books include Charlie Chaplin, La Grande Histoire, Editions Jean Michel Place,Paris, 1998.
Chaplin in Pictures was presented in….
Paris, France
At The Jeu de Paume gallery from June 7th to September 18th 2005
Kunsthal, Rotterdam
From October 2005 to January 2006.
Hamburg, Germany
At the Deichtorhallen from February 2006 to end of May 2006.
Lausanne, Switzerland Musée de L’Elysée from June 15th to September 24th 2006.
Musée de L’Elysée
18, avenue de L’Elysée
Tel: + 41 21 316 99 11
Bruxelles, Belgium
At Le Botanique From 12 October to 31 December 2006
Centre culturel de la Communauté française Wallonie-Bruxelles
rue Royale, 236
Bruxelles 1210 - Belgium
Montpellier, France
At “Le Pavillon de l’image” From February to April 2007
2 place de Ptronque
3400 Montpellier
Bologna, Italia
At Sala Bostra From June 2nd to October 30th 2007
Madrid, Spain
At Caixa Forum Madrid From July 2 to October 19 2008
Paseo del Prado, 36. 28014 Madrid
In Lisbon
At Palacio da Quintanilh
From September 4 to October 4 2008
In the [Lisbon Village Festival]
Rua Tierno Galvan – Torre 3, Sala 405
1070-274 LISBOA | PORTUGAL
Tel +351 21 0190922 | Tlm +351 917 580 956
Email: lisbon@villagefestival.net
Charlie Chaplin used to go there with his family for holidays, and following the tradition, 2 of his daughters are still regular visitors of this beautiful spot.
A statue of Chaplin facing the sea is a local touristic attraction : you can see it lost in its immortality, contemplating seagulls and who knows, maybe somewhere above the Ocean, good ol’ United States where all the glory began…
But melancholy is not in the Little Tramp’s nature and one might speculate that the vivid spirit of the ‘funniest man in the world’ inspired the local villagers to bring some animation in.
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And so the Charlie Chaplin Film Festival was born with the aim to have a lot of fun and retribute new and aspiring filmmakers whose creations would honour Chaplin’s irreverence, integrity, honesty, humour and warmth…
Presented by the Film Programmes Office of the Leisure and Cultural Services Department, 26 films of the two masters will be screened from September 2 to October 23 at the Cinema of the Hong Kong Film Archive (HKFA) and the Lecture Halls of the Hong Kong Space Museum and the Hong Kong Science Museum.
Among the screenings of Chaplin’s films : “A Dog’s Life” (1918); “The Kid” (1921); “The Idle Class” (1921); “The Gold Rush” (1925); “The Circus” (1928), which was nominated for four awards in the first Oscars ceremony;”City Lights” (1931); “Modern Times” (1936)…